In your custom attribute, you can add this ShouldRun() check like this:
public override void OnActionExecuting(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
{
if (ShouldRun(filterContext))
{
// proceed with your code
}
}
private bool ShouldRun(ActionExecutingContext filterContext)
{
var ignoreAttributes = filterContext.ActionDescriptor.GetCustomAttributes(typeof(IgnoreMyCustomAttribute), false);
if (ignoreAttributes.Length > 0)
return false;
return true;
}
ShouldRun() simply checks whether there's a "IgnoreMyCustomAttribute" on your action. If it's there, then your custom attribute won't do anything.
You'll now want to create a simple IgnoreMyCustomAttribute, which doesn't do anything:
[AttributeUsage(AttributeTargets.Method, AllowMultiple = false)]
public class IgnoreMyCustomAttribute: ActionFilterAttribute
{
}
Whenever you decorate your controller action with [IgnoreMyCustom], then MyCustomAttribute won't do anything. e.g.:
[IgnoreMyCustom]
public ViewResult MyAction() {
}
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